Chapter 52 ADSL Commands
This next example creates a similar premium profile (named goldi), except it sets an interleave delay of 16 ms for both upstream and downstream traffic.
Figure 217 DSL Port Profile Set Command Example 2
ras> adsl profile set goldi interleave=16,16 1200 24000 5 0 30 128 5 0 30 256 0 6 0 6
After you create a DSL profile, you can assign it to any of the DSL ports on the
Syntax:
ras> adsl profile delete <profile>
where
<profile> | = A profile name. |
This command allows you to delete an individual DSL profile by its name. You cannot delete a profile that is assigned to any of the DSL ports in the
The following example deletes the gold DSL profile.
Figure 218 DSL Port Profile Delete Command Example
ras> adsl profile delete gold
52.1.7 DSL Port Profile Map CommandSyntax:
ras> adsl profile map <portlist> <profile>
where
<portlist> | = | You can specify a single DSL port <1>, all DSL ports <*> |
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| or a list of DSL ports <1,3,5>. You can also include a range |
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| of ports <1,5,6~10>. |
<profile> | = | The profile that will define the settings of this port. |
<glitegdmtets | = | The ADSL operational mode. |
it1413autoad |
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sl2adsl2+> |
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This command assigns a specific profile to an individual port and sets the port’s operational mode (or standard). The profile defines the maximum and minimum upstream/downstream rates, the target upstream/downstream signal noise margins, and the maximum and minimum upstream/downstream acceptable noise margins of all the DSL ports to which you assign the profile.
When set to auto, the port follows whatever mode is set on the other end of the line.
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